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The Mystery Font That Took Over New York (nytimes.com)

How did Choc, a quirky calligraphic typeface drawn by a French graphic designer in the 1950s, end up on storefronts everywhere? From a report: Stand just about anywhere on Broadway, or on Canal Street with its sprightly neon and overstuffed souvenir shops, or the long stretch of restaurants, hardware stores, pharmacies, bars, realtors, barber shops, groceries and auto shops that extends through Fifth Avenue in South Brooklyn, and you'll find a surplus of vibrant and overstated signage -- a cacophony of typography. Steven Heller, a co-chairman at the School of Visual Arts' M.F.A. program, sees it somewhat differently. "You say 'cacophony,'" he said. "I call it chaos." But amid all of this chaos there is the occasional beacon. Choc, for instance.

It's a typeface that draws the eye with its inherent contradictions. It seems to have been drawn improvisationally with a brush, and yet it's so hefty it looks like it could slip off a wall. It's both delicate and emphatic, a casual paradox, like a Nerf weapon. Choc is far from the most popular typeface on the storefronts of New York, but it can still be found everywhere and in every borough. It's strewn on fabric awnings and etched in frosted glass. It gleams in bright magenta or platinum lighting. It's used for beauty salons, Mexican restaurants, laundromats, bagel shops, numerous sushi bars. It may be distorted, stacked vertically, or shoehorned into a cluster of other typefaces. But even here Choc remains clear and articulate, its voice deep and friendly, its accent foreign, perhaps, yet endearing. You've already seen it, probably repeatedly, like a stranger you recognize from your morning commute.

2 of 72 comments (clear)

  1. Re:How about a picture of the fucking glyphs? by Rockoon · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Uh. how about SHOWING us the glyphs instead of textually describing them and making us look them up so we can understand what the fuck you are going on about???

    When you are writing an advertisement for a font that the copyright holder wishes to sell, a bad move would be to include the font glyphs for free.

    --
    "His name was James Damore."
  2. Re:Mystery font by ortholattice · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Personally, I think it is harder to read that Comic Sans. Out of context, individual letters can be confusing: https://cdn.myfonts.net/s/aw/7... . Imagine it as the font for the code you're trying to debug, and you'll be begging to have Comic Sans back (if that's your only other choice).

    OTOH unlike the ubiquitous sans-serif used here on slashdot and half the rest of the web, you can distinguish I and l, so debugging your code is at least theoretically possible. l'II give it a bonus point for that. (Comic Sans also gets that bonus point.)